DeadlyCurious
Menu
A place

Naples

5 stories from this place.

The Footnote June 25, 2026 · Pompeii Airfield

The Last Eruption of Vesuvius Destroyed Eighty American B-25 Bombers Parked at the Foot of the Mountain

Vesuvius erupted between 17 and 23 March 1944, while Allied forces were operating from a temporary airbase at Pompeii Airfield approximately 8 km from the volcano. The eruption's ashfall destroyed approximately 80 American B-25 medium bombers parked at the field — the largest single-event loss of American aircraft to a non-combat cause in the European theatre.

Read the story →
The Cabinet June 24, 2026 · Pompeii archaeological site

The Italian Archaeologist Who Turned Pompeii Into a Science by Pouring Plaster Into Empty Holes

When the Bourbon-era treasure hunters were finished with Pompeii, the site was a substantially-mined ruin without a coherent excavation record. Giuseppe Fiorelli took over the directorship in 1863 and turned the site into the founding example of modern archaeological method. His most-famous innovation was to pour liquid plaster into the empty voids left by [Vesuvius's victims](/articles/vesuvius-pompeii-79).

Read the story →
The Cabinet June 24, 2026 · Villa of the Papyri, Herculaneum

The Only Classical Library That Survived Antiquity Was Buried Intact at Herculaneum

When [Vesuvius erupted in 79 AD](/articles/vesuvius-pompeii-79), it buried a Roman seaside villa at Herculaneum under 25 metres of pyroclastic debris. Inside the villa was a working library of about 1,800 papyrus scrolls — the only intact classical library that has ever been recovered. The scrolls were carbonised by the heat. Modern X-ray imaging is finally reading them.

Read the story →